The Messy Edge conference
As Director of Brighton Digital Festival, I developed and curated the Messy Edge (2017-2019). The Festival's in-house conference was designed to challenge the dominant narratives around digital technology and culture by inviting artists, activists and thinkers from outside of the usual white male perspectives that are over-represented in the conversation.
The curatorial position came from a place of critical optimism – in that there was a belief in the idea that digital technology can add value to society but that it also needed to be examined critically and not blindly accepted.
The three editions of the Messy Edge were not strictly themed, the speakers tended to be clustered around what I was finding generally interesting at the time. In the broadest sense, they could be thought of as follows -
2017 – I’d been reading Donna Haraway’s essay Staying With the Trouble and Lisa Nakamura’s Cybertypes and their thoughts resonated deeply with me - ie the dangers of techno evangelists singing the praises of digital technology and its potential to ‘fix’ things whilst ignoring the socio-cultural problems of the present and in fact replicating them into the future.
2018 – Around this time there was a lot of discussion about the right to be forgotten in online spaces, to have damaging information erased. I was interested in who gets seen in online spaces, who is building them and to what end – who is being excluded?
2019 – I’d become interested in work that was using digital technologies to examine public spaces, to critique or subvert them and to find community within them and to think about how the digital overlay that now exists, shapes our movements and interactions with the ‘real’ world.
The Messy Edge was the first step in working towards articulating my belief in the activism inherent in bringing together voices that are usually on the margins and by centring them not in siloed categories but as a polyvocal multi perspective whole.
Laurence Hill
“The messy edge is the antithesis of the cutting edge, it’s not clinical, or shiny, or binary. It’s interested in technology and what it can do but it doesn’t celebrate technology for its own sake — it’s human, sometimes confusing, often challenging and a bit awkward but it is vital”
Speakers at the Messy Edge
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Tabita Rezaire
Artist
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Irene Fubara Manuel
Artist and academic
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Daniel Rourke & Morehshin Allahyari
Artists and activists
“Congratulations for another outstanding conference. It’s truly my favourite conference. It takes diversity seriously & provokes our understandings & mid understandings of (digital) society & culture. Truly the cutting edge of the #messyedge”
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Florence Okoye
UX designer
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Caroline Bassett
Academic
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Usman Haque
Architect
“As an early career researcher from an African-Caribbean background, his Messy Edge conference in 2017 provided a crucial platform for me to engage with broader inclusive perspectives outside of those typically represented in leading edge digital conferences”
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Judith Ricketts
Artist and academic
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Catherine Allen
Immersive media producer
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Maya Indira Ganesh & Nishant Shah
Academics
“It was a pleasure to be part of Messy Edge. It's a lovely vibe and I really like your ethos. I especially notice and appreciate the work you have put into diversifying the voices represented”
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Carmen Weisskopf
Artist
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Akeelah Bertram
Artist
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Emma Frankland
Writer and performer
“Thanks to Laurence Hill and the speakers, for yesterday's The Messy Edge conference. I'm awake early hours of the morning with a head full of the diverse, complex, engaging, challenging and currently, very relevant ideas presented”
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Rhiannon Armstrong
Artist
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Kuchenga
Writer
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Dolly Sen
Artist
“#messyedge literally confounded my expectations. Well done Laurence Hill for an excellently curated set of speakers. I like it when my reality tunnel is perturbed.”
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Dr Sharon Webb
Academic
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Romy Gad el Rab
Researcher
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Bill Thompson
Journalist
“The speakers he selects [for the Messy Edge] challenge traditional thinking and common practice in an engaging and insightful manner. It is clear that Laurence carefully curates each element of an event to ensure there is breath and depth and that participants leave inspired”
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Tonya Nelson
Writer and speaker
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Nye Thompson
Artist
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Wes Goatley
Artist
“In such wonderful company at #BDF17 'The Messy Edge' chairing the morning sesh at Brighton Digital Festival's inaugural conference on authorship, representation, digital, divination, healing and unsung histories. Inspired”
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Abira Hussein
Artist
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Emilie de Keulenaar
Researcher
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Laurence Hill
Curator